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  1. Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance (born Sylvester Clark Long; December 1, 1890 – March 20, 1932) was an African-American journalist, writer and film actor who, for a time, became internationally prominent as a spokesman for Native American causes.

  2. Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance was born Sylvester Clark Long in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. He was the son of Joseph S. Long. Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance's career started when he was employed by a wild west show, whose owner mistook him for native American.

  3. On 20 Mar. 1932 Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance was found dead in a friend's mansion near Los Angeles. The coroner's inquest ruled that his death was a suicide but failed to establish the motive. Only recently has the reason become clear.

  4. Writer: Long Lance. Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance was born Sylvester Clark Long in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. He was the son of Joseph S. Long. Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance's career started when he was employed by a wild west show, whose owner mistook him for native American.

  5. Feb 7, 2006 · Adopted by the Kainai (Blood) as Buffalo Child in 1922, he began a freelance writing career as Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance. In 1928 he published his fictitious "auto-biography," Long Lance, which won acclaim as a Blackfoot reminiscence of growing up in the last days of freedom on the plains.

  6. May 20, 2024 · We take a look at the amazing Rise and Fall of Sylvester Long also known as Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance.

  7. Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance (born Sylvester Clark Long; December 1, 1890 – March 20, 1932) was an African-American journalist, writer and film actor who, for a time, became internationally prominent as a spokesman for Native American causes.

  8. Mar 21, 2012 · This colorful character served in the First World War, settled in Calgary and worked for the Calgary Herald under the byline Buffalo Child Long Lance.

  9. In the early and mid 1920s, now calling himself Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance, the talented writer penned articles, based on personal investigations, about aboriginal people in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba.

  10. Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance was neither Blackfoot nor Blood from the Plains of Montana and Alberta, but rather a man of mixed heritage: European, Indigenous, and African American, who was born and raised in the factory town of Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

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